The H2/CO ratio of emissions from combustion sources: comparison of top‐down with bottom‐up measurements in southwest Germany

Details

Location
Europe
Objectives
Objective 1
Objective 2
Objective 3
Objective 4
Year
2009

Description

The hydrogen‐to‐carbon monoxide (H2/CO) emission ratio of anthropogenic combustion sources was determined from more than two years of quasi‐continuous atmospheric observations in Heidelberg (49°24′ N, 8°42′ E), located in the polluted Rhein‐Neckar region. Evaluating concurrent mixing ratio changes of H2 and CO during morning rush hours yielded mean molar H2/CO ratios of 0.40 ± 0.06, while respective results inferred from synoptic pollution events gave a mean value of 0.31 ± 0.05 mole H2/mole CO. After correction for the influence of the H2 soil sink on the measured ratios, mean values of 0.46 ± 0.07 resp. 0.48 ± 0.07 mole H2/mole CO were obtained, which are in excellent agreement with direct source studies of traffic emissions in the Heidelberg/Mannheim region (0.448 ± 0.003 mole H2/mole CO). Including results from other European studies, our best estimate of the mean H2/CO emission ratio from anthropogenic combustion sources (mainly traffic) ranges from 0.45 to 0.48 mole H2/mole CO, which is about 20% smaller than the value of 0.59 mole H2/mole CO which is frequently used as the basis to calculate global H2 emissions from anthropogenic combustion sources.